Discreet Dolls
Toronto Escorts

The New Supreme Court Justice

Valcazar

Just a bundle of fucking sunshine
Mar 27, 2014
28,653
51,054
113
Thought there might be a thread on this already, but it seems not.
Breyer is stepping down and Biden will name a replacement.
With a 50-50 senate, that may be trickier than people would like.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
82,020
18,321
113
Thought there might be a thread on this already, but it seems not.
Breyer is stepping down and Biden will name a replacement.
With a 50-50 senate, that may be trickier than people would like.
Breyer announced he wouldn't resign until a replacement was agreed upon.
That may be the new normal, but totally a reaction to Mitch's handiwork in the past.
So if Mitch stalls, he stays.
 

y2kmark

Class of 69...
May 19, 2002
18,682
5,243
113
Lewiston, NY
Breyer announced he wouldn't resign until a replacement was agreed upon.
That may be the new normal, but totally a reaction to Mitch's handiwork in the past.
So if Mitch stalls, he stays.
New reality TV - Battle of the Network flip flops🍿 Repugs are particularly strong these days...
 
  • Like
Reactions: silentkisser

jcpro

Well-known member
Jan 31, 2014
24,673
6,836
113
Breyer announced he wouldn't resign until a replacement was agreed upon.
That may be the new normal, but totally a reaction to Mitch's handiwork in the past.
So if Mitch stalls, he stays.
Maybe Mitch will hire Michael Avenatti like the Democrats did. ROTFLMFAO!!
 
  • Like
Reactions: whitehill_21

jcpro

Well-known member
Jan 31, 2014
24,673
6,836
113
It will be a black woman.
Of course. The lefties, these days, have no regard for meritocracy, ability, accomplishments- it's all about virtue signaling and identity politics. Exactly what Jordan Peterson said in his resignation letter just last week.
 

Butler1000

Well-known member
Oct 31, 2011
28,971
3,555
113
I don't see any issues with this one. Neither Manchin or Sinema have any history of interfering in the nomination process, both of them are only interested in their corporate donors needs. It maintains a 6-3 court, which means no change in the dynamic.

There will he some hand wringing, the press will try make this one out to be a crisis when it isn't, and it will get done as a "win" for the mid terms.

The only question is how the Dems time it. Before the mid terms to try to show they can actually do something, or right after to use it as a distraction from other domestic policy failures. His "choosing" to go obviously came under pressure of some kind, and there is real fear of another RBG moment.
 

silentkisser

Master of Disaster
Jun 10, 2008
3,621
4,432
113
Of course. The lefties, these days, have no regard for meritocracy, ability, accomplishments- it's all about virtue signaling and identity politics. Exactly what Jordan Peterson said in his resignation letter just last week.
What are you talking about? For the majority of the courts existence it was led by white men. In 1967 Thurgood Marshal became the first African-American named to the court by LBJ. There has only been one other, Clarence Thomas. In 1981 Reagan promised to put a woman on, which became Sandra Day O'Connor. Since then, four have gotten the nod. So, out of the 113 justices in the court's history, two have been African American, five have been women, and there has only been one Latino.

So, for the first 178 years it was all white and male. So, basically, in its 233 year history, only 1.75% have been black men, 6% have been women, and 0.9% have been Latina. So, you can go cry about how this is going against a meritocracy all you want, but I would also point out that Trump appointed both Brett Kavanagh and Amy Coney Barrett, who nobody would ever claim to be the cream of the crop in the American judiciary. They got appointed because the GOP thought they could use them to gain a majority and upturn established laws like Roe V. Wade. And I am willing to bet money that whomever Biden nominates will have better credentials than both of them.

But it is cute how you think you're making a point.
 

jcpro

Well-known member
Jan 31, 2014
24,673
6,836
113
  • Like
Reactions: bluecolt

toguy5252

Well-known member
Jun 22, 2009
15,971
6,110
113

Dutch Oven

Well-known member
Feb 12, 2019
6,848
2,309
113
What are you talking about? For the majority of the courts existence it was led by white men. In 1967 Thurgood Marshal became the first African-American named to the court by LBJ. There has only been one other, Clarence Thomas. In 1981 Reagan promised to put a woman on, which became Sandra Day O'Connor. Since then, four have gotten the nod. So, out of the 113 justices in the court's history, two have been African American, five have been women, and there has only been one Latino.

So, for the first 178 years it was all white and male. So, basically, in its 233 year history, only 1.75% have been black men, 6% have been women, and 0.9% have been Latina. So, you can go cry about how this is going against a meritocracy all you want, but I would also point out that Trump appointed both Brett Kavanagh and Amy Coney Barrett, who nobody would ever claim to be the cream of the crop in the American judiciary. They got appointed because the GOP thought they could use them to gain a majority and upturn established laws like Roe V. Wade. And I am willing to bet money that whomever Biden nominates will have better credentials than both of them.

But it is cute how you think you're making a point.
What a silly analysis. If you want to look at appointments by percentage, you'd have to look at what percentage of the bar was black at various points in time, what percentage were senior and well-respected counsel, what percentage were appointed to lower courts, what percentage of lower court judges who were black were thereafter appointed to a higher court, etc. etc.

There's no point looking for SCOTUS appointments to be 14% black until at least 14% of the bar is black, 14% of the most respected members of the bar are black, and on and on up the recruitment chain, etc. etc. It's going to take generations for that to happen.

By the the time it does, hopefully the legal profession might get their minds around the concept of merit, and all of this won't matter anyway.
 
  • Like
  • Wow
Reactions: fall and Valcazar

mandrill

Well-known member
Aug 23, 2001
71,420
71,073
113
Of course. The lefties, these days, have no regard for meritocracy, ability, accomplishments- it's all about virtue signaling and identity politics. Exactly what Jordan Peterson said in his resignation letter just last week.
Not really.

There will be several eminently well qualified Black, female judges who are able to do this task as well as any white male can. Affirmative action for Bench appointments is pretty standard anywhere.
 

Valcazar

Just a bundle of fucking sunshine
Mar 27, 2014
28,653
51,054
113
Breyer announced he wouldn't resign until a replacement was agreed upon.
That may be the new normal, but totally a reaction to Mitch's handiwork in the past.
So if Mitch stalls, he stays.
Mitch can't stall unless there's something that takes out a Dem senator.
 

Valcazar

Just a bundle of fucking sunshine
Mar 27, 2014
28,653
51,054
113
I don't see any issues with this one. Neither Manchin or Sinema have any history of interfering in the nomination process, both of them are only interested in their corporate donors needs. It maintains a 6-3 court, which means no change in the dynamic.

There will he some hand wringing, the press will try make this one out to be a crisis when it isn't, and it will get done as a "win" for the mid terms.

The only question is how the Dems time it. Before the mid terms to try to show they can actually do something, or right after to use it as a distraction from other domestic policy failures. His "choosing" to go obviously came under pressure of some kind, and there is real fear of another RBG moment.
Corporate donors really want more Federalist judges. Now, if the argument is that at 6-3 it isn't worth fighting to make it 7-2, then sure.
Of course there was fear of an RBG moment. RBG not retiring strategically was a disastrous choice.
The indications now are that they will do it as quickly as they can. They don't want the nomination butting up against the election, especially if they lose control of the senate.
They also don't want to have the nomination running parallel with the series of pro-corporate/pro-culture war judgments we expect in June.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Frankfooter

Valcazar

Just a bundle of fucking sunshine
Mar 27, 2014
28,653
51,054
113
Not really.

There will be several eminently well qualified Black, female judges who are able to do this task as well as any white male can. Affirmative action for Bench appointments is pretty standard anywhere.
And that's if you limit it to judges, which is a silly limitation (and not constitutionally required).
There are probably hundreds of thousands of people who can do the job so if you limit it to the top 1% (assuming you even have any kind of real metric that lets you determine that) you are going to have a couple of thousand of people to pick from.

Every name on the short list we've seen is completely qualified, moreso than Kavanaugh and Barrett.

I have to admit, the right wing noise machine going for "She will be unqualified because she is a black woman" before anyone was even announced surprised me. I thought they would just go the Sotomayor route of claiming she was dumb and unqualified after the fact.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Frankfooter

Dutch Oven

Well-known member
Feb 12, 2019
6,848
2,309
113

Valcazar

Just a bundle of fucking sunshine
Mar 27, 2014
28,653
51,054
113
So then its really about the two dems who might say no.
Not just that.
It's a 50-50 tie.
All you need is for one Dem to get sick or injured and they can't confirm anyone if the GOP decides to be assholes about it.
 
Toronto Escorts